General
Policies and Procedures
Late Penalties
- Assignments are submitted
electronically, they must be submitted before midnight on the due date.
That is, before the next day starts—if an assignment was due on the 5th, and
you handed it in at 11:50 p.m. on the 5th, it isn't late.
- Labs are submitted on paper,
they are due at the end of lecture on the due date. Put them in the
assignment box in CSIL.
- Late assignments will have 10%
deducted per day. Weekends count the same as weekdays. Late labs will get
0. (Up to 3 days)
- No excuses for submitting an
assignment late will be accepted, except perhaps a doctor's note that says
you were unable to complete the assignment any time between when it was
assigned and due.
Academic Honesty
- Some examples of unacceptable
behaviour:
- Handing in assignments that
are not 100% your own work (in design, implementation, wording, etc.),
without proper citation.
- Using any unpermitted
resources during an exam.
- Looking at, or attempting to
look at, another student's paper during an exam.
- Submitting work that has been
submitted before, for any course at any institution.
- If you are unclear on what
academic honesty is, see SFU's Policy S10-01.
- All instances of academic
dishonesty will be dealt with very severely.
- In general, minimum requested
penalties will be as follows:
- For assignments: a mark of
-100% on the assignment. So, academic dishonesty on an assignment worth
5% of your final mark will result in a zero on the assignment, and a
penalty of 5% from your final grade.
- For exams: an F in the course.
Please
note that these are minimum penalties. At the instructor's option, more severe
penalties may be given/requested. All instances of academic
dishonesty will be noted on your University record.
- The instructor may use, or
require students to submit assignments to, an automated service that will
check for plagiarism.
Exams and Tests
- Midterms may be in different
rooms than the lectures. You will be notified by email.
- Exams may be written in either
pen or pencil. Calculators or other aids are not allowed unless explicitly
stated.
- Midterm exams and other tests
may or may not be returned, depending on the course. If they are returned,
you can get them from the instructor's office hours. You can not dispute
the marking of your exam after you have taken it out of the instructor's
office.
- Final exams are not returned to
students by University policy; they are kept by the instructor.
- If you miss a test or exam, you
must present a note from SFU’s doctor with a sick sheet to get a mark
other than zero. Arrangements to make up the lost marks will be made on a
case-by-case basis by the instructor. Make-up exams may be given as an
oral examination.
- You must get a pass on the
weighted average of the exams to pass the course.
Mark Appeals
Except for final grades,
this is how you can go about getting your mark changed:
- Requests for a change in your
mark must come to the course instructor if you cannot sort it out with the
TAs.
- You should give a brief
explanation of why you want your mark reevaluated.
- The instructor will remark the
entire assignment/test. This will be your mark, whether it is higher or
lower than the original.
- Appeals may be made up to two
weeks after the mark is returned.
- For exams in particular, these
are not reasons to get more marks:
- I knew what I was saying here,
but didn't write it.
- This is the correct answer for
some question other than the one asked, but I didn't get any marks for
it.
- I didn't understand the
question.
Final Exam and Final Marks
Appeals
If you're concerned about
your mark at the end of the course, you can see the instructor. Here are some
guidelines:
- You can come to the
instructor's office at designated times to review your final exam.
- Like assignments, you can ask
the instructor to reevaluate your final exam marking.
- The following are not good
reasons to get a higher final mark:
- I want it.
- I think I deserve it.
- I need it.
- I'm close to the next grade
cutoff.
- The marking scheme is fixed. If
you did badly on a midterm, you can't weight the final more heavily.